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By David Sweet, About.com Guide to Camping since 1997

Tent Floors, What to Look for

Thursday June 19, 2008
A tent is your shelter at the campground. It's where you'll sleep at night and where you'll store your clothes and other gear. Remember that a tent is not a place to store food, and you should never eat in your tent. Your tent should have features that will protect you from the elements. You want it to be sturdy enough to stand up under windy conditions, and it should keep you dry when it rains. Besides having a good rainfly for a roof, it needs to have a good floor to keep out ground water that seeps under your tent. It doesn't have to rain for water to accumulate under your tent. Morning dew will collect on your tent, run down the walls and settle under your tent too.

A good tent will have a one piece tub floor, which means there are no cross-seams connecting the floor material. Even though floor seams could be sealed, they are subject to wear and tear, and they would require more frequent re-sealing. A tub floor gets its name from the way the material continues up the walls about six inches before being sewn to the walls. The purpose of this is to keep the side seams elevated so that no seams are touching the ground. A floor made out of heavy gauge polyurethane-coated nylon taffeta or oxford nylon will provide good waterproof protection.

Try to keep the inside of your tent free of debris. A whisk broom comes in handy for sweeping up dirt, and a simple throw rug placed by the tent door works well for stepping inside the tent when you have dirty boots or shoes on. Go barefoot in your tent. Take off your shoes and place them on this rug until you go back outside. This keeps the dirt from your shoes on the rug, which you can take outside to shake out.

Last, but not least, use a ground cloth under your tent. This will help protect the tent floor from the abrasion of sticks and stones, and it adds an extra layer of waterproofing below your tent. Be sure to tuck the ground cloth a little bit under your tent so that it doesn't stick out and collect rain that will run between the ground cloth and your tent floor.

Related information:
Features To Look For In A New Tent

Comments
June 20, 2008 at 6:13 pm
(1) Jason says:

I always recommend using footprints with a tent. Our tents each have the optional accessory of a footprint. And they’re all designed specifically for their corresponding tent. Tarps won’t work because they are not waterproof. And even if they were they still won’t work if they’re just a couple inches too big or too small.

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